Companion Books for Silicon Valley Reads 2009

The Liberation of Gabriel King
By K.L. Going
For grades 4-7, this is the story of two friends who overcome their fears - one of going to fifth grade and one of racial prejudice.
"Full of humanity and humor, this well-paced novel offers a dollop of
history with its setting in rural Georgia at the moment local boy Jimmy
Carter's presidential bid is gaining momentum. The villains' credibility
makes them scary, and both Gabe and Frita's refreshingly functional families are
exquisitely drawn..."
- Publisher's Weekly
About the book
Gabriel King believes he was born chicken. He's afraid of spiders, corpses, loose cows, and just about everything related to the fifth grade. If it's a choice between graduating or staying in the fourth grade forever, he's going to stay put - only his best friend Frita Wilson won't hear of it.
"Gabe," says Frita, "we gotta do something about you." When Frita makes up her mind she's like a locomotive - there's no stopping her. "First you're going to make a list.
Write down everything you're afraid of."
Gabe's list is a lot longer than he'd like Frita to know. Plus, he can't quite figure out how tackling his fears will make him brave. Surely jumping off the rope swing over the catfish pond can only lead to certain death...But maybe Frita knows what she's doing. It turns out she's got her own list, and while she's watching Gabe tackle each of his fears, she's avoiding the fear that scares her the most.
With wisdom and clarity, K. L. Going explores the nature of fear in what should be an idyllic summer for two friends from different backgrounds. For them, living in a small town in Georgia with an active Ku Klux Klan, the summer of 1976 is a momentous one.
About the author
K.L. Going has written five novels for young adults and a nonfiction book titled Writing & Selling the YA Novel. www.klgoing.com
Lessons and Discussion Questions
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 The Other Side
Written by Jacqueline Woodson and illustrated by E.B. Lewis
This beautifully illustrated picture book for grades K-3 tells a story of a friendship across race.
"I wanted to write about how powerful kids can be. Clover and Annie fight against segregation by becoming friends.
They don't believe in the ideas adults have about things so they do what they can to change the world. We all have this power."
- Jacqueline Woodson
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About the book
From School Library Journal: Clover, the young African-American narrator, lives beside a fence that segregates her town.
Her mother instructs her never to climb over to the other side because it isn't safe. But one summer morning, Clover notices
a girl on the other side. Both children are curious about one another, and as the summer stretches on,
Clover and Annie work up the nerve to introduce themselves. They dodge the injunction against crossing the fence by
sitting on top of it together, and Clover pretends not to care when her friends react strangely at the sight of
her sitting side by side with a white girl. Eventually, it's the fence that's out of place, not the friendship.
Woodson's spare text is easy and unencumbered.
About the author
Jacqueline Woodson is the author of more than 25 books for children and young adults. www.jacquelinewoodson.com
Lessons and Discussion Questions
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Other books your children may enjoy |
Minty: A Story of Young Harriet Tubman by Alan Schroeder and Jerry Pinkney
Grades K-3
A picture book that introduces Harriet Tubman and the injustice of slavery to young audiences.
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Freedom Rides: Campaign for Equality by Dale Anderson
Ages 9-12
Chronicles the 1961 freedom rides on buses from the south to Washington D.C. to test the U.S. Supreme Court decision against segregation in bus stations. |
Adaline Falling Star by Mary Pope Osborne
Ages 9-12
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The River Between Us by Richard Peck
Ages 9-12
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Jazmin's Notebook by Nikki Grimes
Grades 6-Young Adult
A novel about a 14-year-old girl living in Brooklyn who wants to be a writer. |
Bronx Masquerade by Nikki Grimes
Grades 6-Young Adult
What happens when a high school teacher hosts open-mike poetry in his classroom on Fridays. |
Warriors Don't Cry by Melba Patillo Beals
Grades 7 and up
The personal story of the author, one of nine black students who integrated Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1957.
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